In 1969, Bruccoli befriended F. Scott and Zelda's daughter Frances "Scottie" Fitzgerald.
Bruccoli, Matthew J., The Fortunes of Mitchell Kennerley, Bookman; 1986, Harcourt, Brace Jovanovich ISBN 0-15-132671-1
Gospel of Matthew | Matthew | Matthew Flinders | Matthew McConaughey | Matthew Broderick | St Matthew Passion | Matthew Barney | Matthew Fox | Matthew Prior | Matthew Arnold | Matthew Sweet | Matthew Perry | Matthew C. Perry | Matthew the Apostle | Matthew Herbert | Matthew Prior (cricketer) | Matthew Wolfenden | Matthew Shipp | Matthew Pearl | Matthew Fox (actor) | Matthew Boulton | Matthew Shepard | Matthew Pinsent | Matthew Parker | Matthew of Ajello | Matthew Lillard | Matthew Fontaine Maury | Matthew Paris | Matthew Modine | Matthew Knight |
On July 13, 2006, the leaders of the state legislature, Senate President Robert Travaglini and House Speaker Sal Dimasi, called upon Turnpike Authority chairman Matthew J. Amorello, who provided oversight of the project, to consider stepping down from his position and accepting a diminished role.
His art appears on multiple young-adult fiction book covers, including, "Arthur and the Minimoys", written by French film mogul Luc Besson and "The Clockwork Three" by Matthew J. Kirby.
In August 2006, Governor Romney and the Massachusetts Turnpike Authority board asked Kriss to lead a comprehensive review of the Turnpike following the ouster of Chairman Matthew J. Amorello and the collapse of a portion of the roof of the Ted Williams Tunnel.
Matthew J. Perry (1921 – 2011), United States jurist and federal judge
Matthew J. Blit was born in Brooklyn, New York, was the eldest of two sons, and grew up in the neighborhood of Mill Basin, where he attended South Shore High School.
After the war, he was President of the Security Review Board for Württemberg-Baden, and from 1946 to 1948 President of the Third Military Government Judicial District of Occupied Germany, with seat at Heidelberg.
For the third trial, Lincoln Jenkins, Jr. and Matthew J. Perry represented Ms. Flemming and the jury quickly found in the bus company's favor, but by that time the Montgomery bus boycott and the decision in Browder v. Gayle had been rendered, so a third appeal was not filed.